Welcome to The Source for Bellingham and Whatcom County news.             Logout  |  Member Center
  • Home
  • Obituaries
  • Jobs
  • Real Estate
  • Wheels
  • Apartments
  • Classifieds
  • Shopping
  • Dating
  • Local News
    • On Patrol
    • Growth
    • Waterfront
    • Nation and World
    • Corrections
  • Sports
    • High Schools
    • Local Colleges
    • Community
    • Mariners
    • Seahawks
    • Golf
    • Canucks
  • Business
  • Opinion
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Submit a Letter
  • Lifestyle
    • Announcements
  • Entertainment
    • Movies
    • Dining
  • Outdoors
  • Communities
  • Herald Services
    • Contact Us
    • About The Herald
        SIGN UP NOW  |  PREVIEW
Search for » TODAY'S NEWSPAPER ADS

READER CENTER

Photo store (reprints)
Re-use permissions
News archive
Submit news
Submit announcements
Place Obit
Place a classified ad
Jobs at The Herald
Contact us

MARKETPLACE


Find stuff
Place an ad
Sell a car Find a car
Find a home
List a home
Find an apt.
List a rental
On sale
FREE COUPONS!
CLICK HERE

TOP JOBS

Heath Tecna is hiring
Click job title for more info

Aluminum Boat Welder
Altec Marine

RN & LPN
Northwest Gastroenterology

Program Director & Assistant Ticketing Manager Positions
Mt. Baker Theatre

Sports Equipment Manager 2
Western Washington University

Find more jobs at:
Keywords:
Location:
CLICK HERE

SPECIAL SECTIONS

Homebuyers Guide
Primetime
Local History
Neighbors
Whatcom Weddings
Living Here
Local Jobs
102 Things To Do

OUR SITES

Whatcom Magazine
Northwest Professionals Guide
Whatcom Health: Doctor Search
Skagit Health: Doctor Search
GOBham.com
Reader's Choice
DEAN KAHN
Dean Kahn photo

Dean Kahn's columns on life in Whatcom County appear on Sunday and Monday.

Dean joined The Bellingham Herald in 1986. Before becoming a columnist and Neighbors editor, he was a police and courts reporter, local government reporter and a news editor.

Born in Bremerton, he is a graduate of Western Washington University and the University of Missouri-Columbia. He covered the legislatures in Missouri and Washington for United Press International before joining the Herald.

Dean lives in Bellingham with his wife, Laurie, their two teen-age children, and two cats and two dogs (a sequence the dogs find hard to accept).

You can reach him by calling 360-715-2291 or by e-mail.

Recent Stories

Bellingham pair helping governments go green
Community read-along planned for spring
Mary Jo Iverson recognized for helping the hungry
We Care to celebrate 30-year anniversary
Painting of historic ship Ann Parry to help fund old courthouse renovations
Downtown merchants campaign to stop cigarette litter
Rotary clubs help food bank remodel its building
Zlotnik paintings to be exhibited in posthumous tribute to art therapist
Church volunteers help build Grace Center
Cancer survivor's book chronicles chain of support
Lynden teen took the cake as 1948 strawberry queen
Consultant helps locals install veggie gardens
Road work affects Silver Beach
Filmmaker honors Sept. 11 Lummi totem pole carvers
Raising the issue of urban forests
Jul, 21, 2008

PEOPLE

Church volunteers help build Grace Center

Members partner with Pearson Construction

TRINITY LUTHERAN

MAX BITTLE | THE BELLINGHAM HERALD

Barbara Clary laughs with job superintendent Andy McElroy at Trinity Lutheran Church's new Grace Center annex on Thursday, July 17 in Bellingham. More than 75 members of the congregation have helped Pearson Construction with the labor since the project began last October.


GRACE CENTER

The new Grace Center at Trinity Lutheran Church, 119 Texas St., will be dedicated at 1 p.m. Sunday, July 27.
Details: 734-2770.

`

Advertisement


DEAN KAHN
THE BELLINGHAM HERALD

E-mail
Print
*Beta

Dick Moen retired recently, but he has worked two to three days a week the past several months to help build a $1.5 million fellowship hall and classroom building for his Bellingham church, Trinity Lutheran.

“There was always something to do,” said Moen, who retired from a career in electronics engineering. “I looked forward to going.”

Moen was able to lend a hand, and to save some labor expenses for Trinity, through an innovative program at Pearson Construction, the Bellingham contractor on the project.

For nearly 25 years, Pearson has given congregation members the option to contribute volunteer labor when Pearson wins a bid to build or remodel a house of faith.

Steve Reynolds, an owner of Pearson, came up with the idea in 1984 for a project at Word of Life World Outreach Center in Lynden, said Andy McElroy, superintendent of the Trinity job.

Pearson’s paperwork for a project includes detailed figures on how much labor will be needed for each construction task. Then, working with a volunteer coordinator chosen by the church, Pearson crew leaders plug volunteers into various job slots, depending on their skills and schedules.

At Trinity, the 44 volunteers have ranged from teens to retirees, teachers to engineers, people skilled at electrical work to people willing to get dirty for a good cause.

“We will let the volunteers do what they’re capable of,” McElroy said. “I have a 10-year-old kid who comes and cleans with his dad.”

When the project is done, Pearson tabulates the final cost, then subtracts that figure from the initial bid. The difference — the result of the volunteers’ labor — is credited to the church, and can total tens of thousands of dollars.

“It creates a tremendous savings for them,” McElroy said.

Trinity volunteers have logged more than 1,000 hours since construction began last October, and Moen, 69, contributed more than his fair share.

He began early, flagging traffic and sweeping Cornwall Avenue when dump trucks were busy excavating the site behind the main church at Texas Street and Dean Avenue. Moen’s other chores included helping with the foundation and electrical work, putting up scaffolding, and installing flooring.

He praised McElroy and the other Pearson workers for their patience and their friendliness.

“Anytime you had a question, they would stop,” he said. “They would take their time.”

The 11,000-square-foot building, called Grace Center, provides needed space, and gave church members a focus for the future once they celebrated Trinity’s centennial two years ago.

The basement has a music practice room, game room and conference room. The main level has a kitchen and a large fellowship hall for wedding receptions, dinners and other church gatherings. The top floor has two large rooms for youth groups.

Pastor Doug Iben said a goal of the church is to provide tutoring and other after-school programs for young people, and not just those who attend Trinity.

“We really want this building to serve the community,” he said.


Contact Dean Kahn at dean.kahn@bellinghamherald.com or 715-2291.

Bellingham Herald Logo Copyright ©2008 The Bellingham Herald
All rights reserved. Any copying, redistribution or retransmission of any of the contents
of this service without the express written consent of The Bellingham Herald is expressly prohibited.
The Bellingham Herald. 1155 N. State. St., Bellingham, WA 98225, Phone (360) 676-2600.
Terms of Use | Privacy Statement | About The Bellingham Herald | About Real Cities Network